“Beat Him, Take Everything Away” Abuses by China’S Chengguan Para-Police WATCH

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“Beat Him, Take Everything Away” Abuses by China’S Chengguan Para-Police WATCH HUMAN RIGHTS “Beat Him, Take Everything Away” Abuses by China’s Chengguan Para-Police WATCH “Beat Him, Take Everything Away” Abuses by China’s Chengguan Para-Police Copyright © 2012 Human Rights Watch All rights reserved. Printed in the United States of America ISBN: 1-56432-894-5 Cover design by Rafael Jimenez Human Rights Watch is dedicated to protecting the human rights of people around the world. We stand with victims and activists to prevent discrimination, to uphold political freedom, to protect people from inhumane conduct in wartime, and to bring offenders to justice. We investigate and expose human rights violations and hold abusers accountable. We challenge governments and those who hold power to end abusive practices and respect international human rights law. We enlist the public and the international community to support the cause of human rights for all. Human Rights Watch is an international organization with staff in more than 40 countries, and offices in Amsterdam, Beirut, Berlin, Brussels, Chicago, Geneva, Goma, Johannesburg, London, Los Angeles, Moscow, Nairobi, New York, Paris, San Francisco, Tokyo, Toronto, Tunis, Washington DC, and Zurich. For more information, please visit our website: http://www.hrw.org MAY 2012 ISBN: 1-56432-894-5 “Beat Him, Take Everything Away” Abuses by China’s Chengguan Para-Police Map of China ...................................................................................................................... ii Summary ........................................................................................................................... 1 Recommendations .............................................................................................................. 5 Methodology ...................................................................................................................... 8 I. Background ................................................................................................................... 10 Chengguan Origin and Legal Basis .......................................................................................... 10 Duties and Training ................................................................................................................ 18 Chengguan and Street Vendors .............................................................................................. 20 Public Criticism ...................................................................................................................... 23 Reform Efforts ......................................................................................................................... 25 II. Chengguan Abuses ....................................................................................................... 27 Excessive Force and Torture .................................................................................................... 27 Illegal Detention ..................................................................................................................... 32 Abuses Accompanying Confiscation of Goods ......................................................................... 36 Impunity ................................................................................................................................. 41 III. Relevant International and Domestic Legal Standards ................................................. 44 Excessive Force ...................................................................................................................... 44 Prohibition of Cruel, Inhuman or Degrading Treatment and Torture .......................................... 45 Due Process and Arbitrary Detention ...................................................................................... 46 Impunity ................................................................................................................................. 47 Acknowledgments ............................................................................................................ 49 Annex I: Letter from HRW to China’s Public Security Bureau .............................................. 50 Annex II: Letter from HRW to the Chinese Communist Party’s Political and Legislative Affairs Committee ....................................................................................................................... 53 Annex III: Chinese State Media Accounts of Chengguan Abuses, July 2010-March 2012 ..... 56 Map of China Data source: ESRI Design: John Emerson “BEAT HIM, TAKE EVERYTHING AWAY” ii Summary One October morning in 2010, four Beijing “Urban Management” officers, or chengguan (城 管), stopped their car next to the cart of Wang Ren (not her real name), a 32-year-old migrant from Henan province, who was selling grapes. Wang told Human Rights Watch that three of the chengguan officers got onto Wang’s cart and without explanation began confiscating her grapes. When Wang protested, they began kicking her. They then threw her from her cart into the road. While they kicked her, they cursed her, saying “Fxxx your mother. You dare ask us for a reason?” After Wang was tossed from her cart, the fourth chengguan officer, who had silently stood by during the beating, interceded and instructed her three colleagues to stop beating Wang. The chengguan officers confiscated Wang’s grapes and departed. Wang was left with deep bruising from the attack.1 Since its founding in 1997, China’s Chengguan Urban Management Law Enforcement (城管 执法), a para-police agency tasked with enforcing non-criminal urban administrative regulations, has earned a reputation for excessive force and impunity. The chengguan have become synonymous among some Chinese citizens with arbitrary and thuggish behavior including assaults on suspected administrative law violators (some of which lead to serious injury or death), illegal detention, and abuses accompanying forceful confiscation of property. This report provides an overview of the creation and development of chengguan units over the past 15 years, details recent cases of abuse, and sets forth recommendations for ending the abuses. In important respects, the concerns highlighted here are illustrative of problems plaguing law enforcement in China more generally: abusive behavior that often goes unpunished, failure to uphold the principle “innocent until proven guilty,” unclear legal regulation, and an obdurate bureaucracy intent on protecting itself. While China allows media coverage of chengguan abuses, regular police on some occasions intervene to protect victims, and 1 Human Rights Watch interview with Wang Ren (a pseudonym), a Beijing street vendor, December 7, 2010. 1 HUMAN RIGHTS WATCH | MAY 2012 there have been some efforts at reform, the problems persist and merit the attention of both Chinese leaders and concerned international actors. The findings here are based on Human Rights Watch interviews with victims of chengguan abuse and other research in six Chinese cities between mid-2009 and 2011 as well as analysis of Chinese-language sources, including laws, regulations, and academic articles, and review of other published reports of chengguan abuses. An appendix provides details of more than 150 cases of chengguan abuses reported in Chinese national and local media between July 2010 and March 2012. Victims of chengguan abuse interviewed by Human Rights Watch told us they were slapped, shoved, pushed to the ground, forcibly held down on the ground, dragged, punched, kicked, and thrown from their vehicles to the street. Many of those with whom Human Rights Watch spoke were street vendors, whose status as internal migrants puts them at particular risk of abuse. Although chengguan personnel have no legal authority to detain suspects, several interviewees said they were detained by them. Some said they suffered physical abuses while detained or while resisting being detained. Many street vendors told us their vehicles and merchandise were confiscated. In some instances, chengguan officers conditioned the return of confiscated belongings on payment of seemingly arbitrary fines, spurring popular speculation of corruption by chengguan authorities. Chengguan have also been implicated in abusive forced evictions of residents from their homes at a time when alleged collusion between corrupt officials and property developers has created what a Chinese human rights organization has described as a “pandemic of illegal demolition” in China. Chinese journalists who attempt to report on chengguan abuses have also been targeted with illegal detention and physical violence by chengguan. The report builds on Human Rights Watch work published over the past five years documenting violations by Chinese police and other public security forces, including enforced disappearances, abuses in detention, torture to gain information and confessions, and lack of due process in police investigations and judicial proceedings. And while the Chinese government has launched legal reform initiatives aimed at reducing police abuses, the chengguan, as a non-criminal law enforcement organ, has not yet been “BEAT HIM, TAKE EVERYTHING AWAY” 2 the target of such initiatives. Despite criticism of chengguan abuses by the Chinese public, state media, lawyers, and legal scholars, the Chinese government has failed to develop effective mechanisms to prevent abuses and punish perpetrators. China’s first chengguan unit began operating on an experimental basis in Beijing in 1997 following passage of the Law of the People’s
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